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Most apparel brands focus on getting one size right.

Usually a medium.

But your customers don’t all wear a medium.

Pattern grading is what determines whether your product fits consistently across every size — or falls apart as you scale.

And it’s one of the most overlooked failure points in apparel manufacturing.

What Pattern Grading Actually Is

Pattern grading is the process of scaling a base pattern into a full size range.

You start with a base size (typically medium), then adjust:

  • Length
  • Width
  • Proportions

…to create sizes like XS, S, L, XL, and beyond.

But grading isn’t just “making things bigger or smaller.”

It’s about maintaining the intended fit across different body types.

Why Pattern Grading Matters More Than Founders Expect

A product can fit perfectly in one size — and fail in others.

This is where grading shows up:

  • Customers say sizing feels inconsistent
  • Returns increase in specific sizes
  • Larger sizes don’t fit proportionally
  • Smaller sizes feel overly tight or distorted

These aren’t random issues.

They’re grading problems.

How Pattern Grading Actually Works

Grading uses a system of measurement increments between sizes.

For example:

  • Chest width may increase by a set amount per size
  • Length may increase at a different rate
  • Armholes, waist, and hips all scale differently

Each measurement has its own grading rule.

Key concept: proportional scaling

Not every part of a garment increases at the same rate.

That’s what makes grading complex — and easy to get wrong.

The Two Most Common Grading Approaches

1. Linear Grading

Each size increases by fixed increments.

Simple, but often too rigid for real body variation.

2. Non-Linear (Engineered) Grading

Adjusts proportions differently across sizes.

More accurate — especially for:

  • Activewear
  • Fitted garments
  • Performance apparel

Most high-quality brands rely on engineered grading.

Where Pattern Grading Goes Wrong

1. Only Testing One Size

This is the most common mistake.

Founders approve:

  1. Fit sample (usually medium)

…but never review:

  • Small
  • Large
  • Extended sizes

Result:

Sizing issues only appear after production — when it’s too late.

2. Using Factory Default Grading

Many factories apply their own grading rules unless told otherwise.

Those rules may:

  • Not match your brand’s fit intent
  • Be optimized for different markets
  • Prioritize production simplicity over accuracy

3. Ignoring Fabric Behavior

Grading isn’t just about measurements.

It’s also about how fabric behaves.

For example:

  • Stretch fabrics require different grading logic
  • Woven fabrics need more structure
  • Shrinkage affects final garment size

If fabric isn’t considered, sizing drifts after production.

4. No Tolerance Control

Even with correct grading, variation happens during production.

Without defined tolerances:

  • Measurements drift
  • Fit becomes inconsistent
  • QC becomes subjective

Why Grading Matters More in Activewear and Swimwear

Certain categories amplify grading issues.

Activewear

  • Compression must remain consistent across sizes
  • Small grading errors change performance

Swimwear

  • High stretch makes fit more sensitive
  • Fabric behavior varies under tension

In both categories, grading isn’t just about fit — it’s about function.

How Grading Impacts Returns and Customer Experience

Sizing inconsistency is one of the biggest drivers of returns.

When grading is off:

  • Customers order multiple sizes
  • Fit varies unpredictably
  • Brand trust drops

Even if the product is high quality, inconsistent fit undermines the experience.

How to Validate Pattern Grading Before Production

1. Review a Size Set

Don’t just approve one sample.

Request:

  • Small
  • Medium
  • Large

At minimum.

2. Check Key Measurements Across Sizes

Focus on:

  • Chest
  • Waist
  • Hip
  • Length

Compare how each scales.

3. Test Fit on Real Bodies

Fit models should represent your customer base.

Not just one body type.

4. Define Tolerances Clearly

Specify:

  • Acceptable measurement variation
  • Critical vs non-critical measurements

This gives factories clear QC standards.

What Good Pattern Grading Looks Like

When grading is done correctly:

  • Fit feels consistent across sizes
  • Proportions stay balanced
  • Performance remains stable (for technical apparel)
  • Return rates decrease

Customers don’t think about sizing — it just works.

When Grading Becomes a Factory Problem

Sometimes the issue isn’t your specs — it’s execution.

Watch for:

  • Inconsistent measurements within the same size
  • Variation across production batches
  • Poor adherence to tolerances

That’s not a grading issue.

That’s a production control issue.

Final Thought

Pattern grading isn’t visible in your product photos.

But it shows up in your customer experience.

The brands that scale successfully don’t just design for one size.

They build systems that ensure every size fits — consistently.

Need Help Validating Your Sizing Before Production?

We help apparel brands review grading, validate fit across sizes, and work with factories that can execute consistently at scale.

Talk to an Apparel Product Sourcing Expert